Sunday, August 28, 2016

#ReadThemAllThon Mini Review: Don't Cry, Tai Lake by Qiu Xiaolong

Here's the first mini-review for books I read during the
#ReadThemAllThon! Unfortunately I move in a week, so it's unlikely I'll
be able to get to the rest of the books planned :( Poor Bulbasaur, I
tried!

Star Rating: * 1/5 Stars

Chief
Inspector Chen Cao of the Shanghai Police Department is offered a bit
of luxury by friends and supporters within the Party – a week’s vacation
at a luxurious resort near Lake Tai, a week where he can relax, and
recover, undisturbed by outside demands or disruptions. Unfortunately,
the once beautiful Lake Tai, renowned for its clear waters, is now
covered by fetid algae, its waters polluted by toxic runoff from local
manufacturing plants. Then the director of one of the manufacturing
plants responsible for the pollution is murdered and the leader of the
local ecological group is the primary suspect of the local police. Now
Inspector Chen must tread carefully if he is to uncover the truth behind
the brutal murder and find a measure of justice for both the victim and
the accused.

Review

Ah sexism, we meet again ... I didn't like this book.

Let's
talk about the good first.

This is an #ownvoices diverse mystery book set in Wuxi, China. It is very immersive in Chinese culture.
There's no Westerners, no suggestion of "white dude saves everyone"
(WOOHOO), it has amazing food descriptions that made me really hungry,
and I liked seeing the city through the eyes of Inspector Chen.

Now the bad.

The
mystery sucked. From the start of the book, I was wondering "why didn't
they ask X?", and, well, X was the murderer. I'm horrible at figuring
out mysteries, so it was a disappointment that my first guess was indeed
correct (I get Miss Fisher mysteries wrong fairly regularly. I'm pretty
bad).

The book is rather obviously focused at a non-Chinese
audience--which is not necessarily a bad thing, but definitely took me
out of the story a few times. It has a lot of extremely simplified
explanations for things, for example:

"You haven't eaten, have you, Chen?"

It was a conventional greeting Chinese people made when running into each other on the street.

I personally disliked the abundance of poetry snippets. I want my clues, dammit!And oh, the sexism. Put on your flame-retardant lab coat, I am going to set something on fire.

The
book features one female character, Shanshan, who is--SURPRISE--young, beautiful,
intelligent, kind, caring, nurturing, and THE LOVE INTEREST. She's a
fucking FLING for Inspector Chen! She's also a suspect. NO. JUST NO. I
was SO pissed at this development. They go on dates! Pour out their
deepest thoughts to each other! Instantly fall in love! She sees him as
her protector! ARGH.

Really really mad because this woman is a fucking
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEER. She works at the company whose CEO is murdered.
She is a LEGITIMATE SUSPECT and probably had HELLA CLUES (not to mention: FUCKING INTELLIGENT and RESILIENT) but dude was
waaaay more concerned with how pretty and understanding she was than asking for her expertise--which he does, but really more because he
wanted to take her on a date. So. Pissed.

The only reason I finished this book was to see if Shanshan was playing Chen all along in a masterful game of manipulation. Sadly, no.